ROEMER AND BRADLEY AND THE VELOCITY OF LIGHT
At Newton’s death England stood
pre-eminent among the nations of Europe in the sphere
of science. But the pre-eminence did not last
long. Two great discoveries were made very soon
after his decease, both by Professor Bradley, of Oxford,
and then there came a gap. A moderately great
man often leaves behind him a school of disciples able
to work according to their master’s methods,
and with a healthy spirit of rivalry which stimulates
and encourages them. Newton left, indeed, a school
of disciples, but his methods of work were largely
unknown to them, and such as were known were too ponderous
to be used by ordinary men. Only one fresh result,
and that a small one, has ever been attained by other
men working according to the methods of the Principia.
The methods were studied and commented on in England
to the exclusion of all others for nigh a century,
and as a consequence no really important work was
done.
On the Continent, however, no such
system of slavish imitation prevailed. Those
methods of Newton’s which had been simultaneously
discovered by Leibnitz were more thoroughly grasped,
modified, extended, and improved. There arose
a great school of French and German mathematicians,
and the laurels of scientific discovery passed to France
and Germany more especially, perhaps, at
this time to France. England has never wholly
recovered them. During the present century this
country has been favoured with some giants who, as
they become distant enough for their true magnitude
to be perceived, may possibly stand out as great as
any who have ever lived; but for the mass and bulk
of scientific work at the present day we have to look
to Germany, with its enlightened Government and extensive
intellectual development. England, however, is
waking up, and what its Government does not do, private
enterprise is beginning to accomplish. The establishment
of centres of scientific and literary activity in
the great towns of England, though at present they
are partially encumbered with the supply of education
of an exceedingly rudimentary type, is a movement
that in the course of another century or so will be
seen to be one of the most important and fruitful
steps ever taken by this country. On the Continent
such centres have long existed; almost every large
town is the seat of a University, and they are now
liberally endowed. The University of Bologna (where,
you may remember, Copernicus learnt mathematics) has
recently celebrated its 800th anniversary.
The scientific history of the century
after Newton, summarized in the above table of dates,
embraces the labours of the great mathematicians Clairaut,
Euler, D’Alembert, and especially of
Lagrange and Laplace.
But the main work of all these men
was hardly pioneering work. It was rather the
surveying, and mapping out, and bringing into cultivation,
of lands already discovered. Probably Herschel
may be justly regarded as the next true pioneer.
We shall not, however, properly appreciate the stages
through which astronomy has passed, nor shall we be
prepared adequately to welcome the discoveries of
modern times unless we pay some attention to the intervening
age. Moreover, during this era several facts
of great moment gradually came into recognition; and
the importance of the discovery we have now to speak
of can hardly be over-estimated.
Our whole direct knowledge of the
planetary and stellar universe, from the early observations
of the ancients down to the magnificent discoveries
of a Herschel, depends entirely upon our happening
to possess a sense of sight. To no other of our
senses do any other worlds than our own in the slightest
degree appeal. We touch them or hear them never.
Consequently, if the human race had happened to be
blind, no other world but the one it groped its way
upon could ever have been known or imagined by it.
The outside universe would have existed, but man would
have been entirely and hopelessly ignorant of it.
The bare idea of an outside universe beyond the world
would have been inconceivable, and might have been
scouted as absurd. We do possess the sense of
sight; but is it to be supposed that we possess every
sense that can be possessed by finite beings?
There is not the least ground for such an assumption.
It is easy to imagine a deaf race or a blind race:
it is not so easy to imagine a race more highly endowed
with senses than our own; and yet the sense of smell
in animals may give us some aid in thinking of powers
of perception which transcend our own in particular
directions. If there were a race with higher or
other senses than our own, or if the human race should
ever in the process of development acquire such extra
sense-organs, a whole universe of existent fact might
become for the first time perceived by us, and we
should look back upon our past state as upon a blind
chrysalid form of existence in which we had been unconscious
of all this new wealth of perception.
It cannot be too clearly and strongly
insisted on and brought home to every mind, that the
mode in which the universe strikes us, our view of
the universe, our whole idea of matter, and force,
and other worlds, and even of consciousness, depends
upon the particular set of sense-organs with which
we, as men, happen to be endowed. The senses of
force, of motion, of sound, of light, of touch, of
heat, of taste, and of smell these we have,
and these are the things we primarily know. All
else is inference founded upon these sensations.
So the world appears to us. But given other sense-organs,
and it might appear quite otherwise. What it
is actually and truly like, therefore, is quite and
for ever beyond us so long as we are finite
beings.
Without eyes, astronomy would be non-existent.
Light it is which conveys all the information we possess,
or, as it would seem, ever can possess, concerning
the outer and greater universe in which this small
world forms a speck. Light is the channel, the
messenger of information; our eyes, aided by telescopes,
spectroscopes, and many other “scopes”
that may yet be invented, are the means by which we
read the information that light brings.
Light travels from the stars to our
eyes: does it come instantaneously? or does it
loiter by the way? for if it lingers it is not bringing
us information properly up to date it is
only telling us what the state of affairs was when
it started on its long journey.
Now, it is evidently a matter of interest
to us whether we see the sun as he is now, or only
as he was some three hundred years ago. If the
information came by express train it would be three
hundred years behind date, and the sun might have
gone out in the reign of Queen Anne without our being
as yet any the wiser. The question, therefore,
“At what rate does our messenger travel?”
is evidently one of great interest for astronomers,
and many have been the attempts made to solve it.
Very likely the ancient Greeks pondered over this
question, but the earliest writer known to me who
seriously discussed the question is Galileo. He
suggests a rough experimental means of attacking it.
First of all, it plainly comes quicker than sound.
This can be perceived by merely watching distant hammering,
or by noticing that the flash of a pistol is seen
before its report is heard, or by listening to the
noise of a flash of lightning. Sound takes five
seconds to travel a mile it has about the
same speed as a rifle bullet; but light is much quicker
than that.
The rude experiment suggested by Galileo
was to send two men with lanterns and screens to two
distant watch-towers or neighbouring mountain tops,
and to arrange that each was to watch alternate displays
and obscurations of the light made by the other, and
to imitate them as promptly as possible. Either
man, therefore, on obscuring or showing his own light
would see the distant glimmer do the same, and would
be able to judge if there was any appreciable interval
between his own action and the response of the distant
light. The experiment was actually tried by the
Florentine Academicians, with the result that,
as practice improved, the interval became shorter
and shorter, so that there was no reason to suppose
that there was any real interval at all. Light,
in fact, seemed to travel instantaneously.
Well might they have arrived at this
result. Even if they had made far more perfect
arrangements for instance, by arranging
a looking-glass at one of the stations in which a
distant observer might see the reflection of his own
lantern, and watch the obscurations and flashings made
by himself, without having to depend on the response
of human mechanism even then no interval
whatever could have been detected.
If, by some impossibly perfect optical
arrangement, a lighthouse here were made visible to
us after reflection in a mirror erected at New York,
so that the light would have to travel across the Atlantic
and back before it could be seen, even then the appearance
of the light on removing a shutter, or the eclipse
on interposing it, would seem to happen quite instantaneously.
There would certainly be an interval: the interval
would be the fiftieth part of a second (the time a
stone takes to drop 1/13th of an inch), but that is
too short to be securely detected without mechanism.
With mechanism the thing might be managed, for a series
of shutters might be arranged like the teeth of a large
wheel; so that, when the wheel rotates, eclipses follow
one another very rapidly; if then an eye looked through
the same opening as that by which the light goes on
its way to the distant mirror, a tooth might have
moved sufficiently to cover up this space by the time
the light returned; in which case the whole would
appear dark, for the light would be stopped by a tooth,
either at starting or at returning, continually.
At higher speeds of rotation some light would reappear,
and at lower speeds it would also reappear; by noticing,
therefore, the precise speed at which there was constant
eclipse the velocity of light could be determined.
This experiment has now been made
in a highly refined form by Fizeau, and repeated by
M. Cornu with prodigious care and accuracy. But
with these recent matters we have no concern at present.
It may be instructive to say, however, that if the
light had to travel two miles altogether, the wheel
would have to possess 450 teeth and to spin 100 times
a second (at the risk of flying to pieces) in order
that the ray starting through any one of the gaps
might be stopped on returning by the adjacent tooth.
Well might the velocity of light be
called instantaneous by the early observers.
An ordinary experiment seemed (and was) hopeless, and
light was supposed to travel at an infinite speed.
But a phenomenon was noticed in the heavens by a quick-witted
and ingenious Danish astronomer, which was not susceptible
of any ordinary explanation, and which he perceived
could at once be explained if light had a certain
rate of travel great, indeed, but something
short of infinite. This phenomenon was connected
with the satellites of Jupiter, and the astronomer’s
name was Roemer. I will speak first of the observation
and then of the man.
Jupiter’s satellites are visible,
precisely as our own moon is, by reason of the shimmer
of sunlight which they reflect. But as they revolve
round their great planet they plunge into his shadow
at one part of their course, and so become eclipsed
from sunshine and invisible to us. The moment
of disappearance can be sharply observed.
Take the first satellite as an example.
The interval between successive eclipses ought to
be its period of revolution round Jupiter. Observe
this period. It was not uniform. On the average
it was 42 hours 47 minutes, but it seemed to depend
on the time of year. When Roemer observed in
spring it was less, and in autumn it was more than
usual. This was evidently a puzzling fact:
what on earth can our year have to do with the motion
of a moon of Jupiter’s? It was probably,
therefore, only an apparent change, caused either
by our greater or less distance from Jupiter, or else
by our greater or less speed of travelling to or from
him. Considering it thus, he was led to see that,
when the time of revolution seemed longest, we were
receding fastest from Jupiter, and when shortest,
approaching fastest.
If, then, light took time on
its journey, if it travelled progressively,
the whole anomaly would be explained.
In a second the earth goes nineteen
miles; therefore in 42-3/4 hours (the time of revolution
of Jupiter’s first satellite) it goes 2.9 million
(say three million) miles. The eclipse happens
punctually, but we do not see it till the light conveying
the information has travelled the extra three million
miles and caught up the earth. Evidently, therefore,
by observing how much the apparent time of revolution
is lengthened in one part of the earth’s orbit
and shortened in another, getting all the data accurately,
and assuming the truth of our hypothetical explanation,
we can calculate the velocity of light. This
is what Roemer did.
Now the maximum amount of retardation
is just about fifteen seconds. Hence light takes
this time to travel three million miles; therefore
its velocity is three million divided by fifteen,
say 200,000, or, as we now know more exactly, 186,000
miles every second. Note that the delay does
not depend on our distance, but on our speed.
One can tell this by common-sense as soon as we grasp
the general idea of the explanation. A velocity
cannot possibly depend on a distance only.
Roemer’s explanation of the
anomaly was not accepted by astronomers. It excited
some attention, and was discussed, but it was found
not obviously applicable to any of the satellites
except the first, and not very simply and satisfactorily
even to that. I have, of course, given you the
theory in its most elementary and simple form.
In actual fact a host of disturbing and complicated
considerations come in not so violently
disturbing for the first satellite as for the others,
because it moves so quickly, but still complicated
enough.
The fact is, the real motion of Jupiter’s
satellites is a most difficult problem. The motion
even of our own moon (the lunar theory) is difficult
enough: perturbed as its motion is by the sun.
You know that Newton said it cost him more labour
than all the rest of the Principia. But
the motion of Jupiter’s satellites is far worse.
No one, in fact, has yet worked their theory completely
out. They are perturbed by the sun, of course,
but they also perturb each other, and Jupiter is far
from spherical. The shape of Jupiter, and their
mutual attractions, combine to make their motions
most peculiar and distracting.
Hence an error in the time of revolution
of a satellite was not certainly due to the
cause Roemer suggested, unless one could be sure that
the inequality was not a real one, unless it could
be shown that the theory of gravitation was insufficient
to account for it. This had not then been done;
so the half-made discovery was shelved, and properly
shelved, as a brilliant but unverified speculation.
It remained on the shelf for half a century, and was
no doubt almost forgotten.
Now a word or two about the man.
He was a Dane, educated at Copenhagen, and learned
in the mathematics. We first hear of him as appointed
to assist Picard, the eminent French geodetic surveyor
(whose admirable work in determining the length of
a degree you remember in connection with Newton),
who had come over to Denmark with the object of fixing
the exact site of the old and extinct Tychonic observatory
in the island of Huen. For of course the knowledge
of the exact latitude and longitude of every place
whence numerous observations have been taken must be
an essential to the full interpretation of those observations.
The measurements being finished, young Roemer accompanied
Picard to Paris, and here it was, a few years after,
that he read his famous paper concerning “An
Inequality in the Motion of Jupiter’s First Satellite,”
and its explanation by means of an hypothesis of “the
successive propagation of light.”
The later years of his life he spent
in Copenhagen as a professor in the University and
an enthusiastic observer of the heavens, not
a descriptive observer like Herschel, but a measuring
observer like Sir George Airy or Tycho Brahe.
He was, in fact, a worthy follower of Tycho, and the
main work of his life is the development and devising
of new and more accurate astronomical instruments.
Many of the large and accurate instruments with which
a modern observatory is furnished are the invention
of this Dane. One of the finest observatories
in the world is the Russian one at Pulkowa, and a
list of the instruments there reads like an extended
catalogue of Roemer’s inventions.
He not only invented the instruments,
he had them made, being allowed money for the purpose;
and he used them vigorously, so that at his death
he left great piles of manuscript stored in the national
observatory.
Unfortunately this observatory was
in the heart of the city, and was thus exposed to
a danger from which such places ought to be as far
as possible exempt.
Some eighteen years after Roemer’s
death a great conflagration broke out in Copenhagen,
and ruined large portions of the city. The successor
to Roemer, Horrebow by name, fled from his house,
with such valuables as he possessed, to the observatory,
and there went on with his work. But before long
the wind shifted, and to his horror he saw the flames
coming his way. He packed up his own and his predecessor’s
manuscript observations in two cases, and prepared
to escape with them, but the neighbours had resorted
to the observatory as a place of safety, and so choked
up the staircase with their property that he was barely
able to escape himself, let alone the luggage, and
everything was lost.
Of all the observations, only three
days’ work remains, and these were carefully
discussed by Dr. Galle, of Berlin, in 1845, and their
nutriment extracted. These ancient observations
are of great use for purposes of comparison with the
present state of the heavens, and throw light upon
possible changes that are going on. Of course
nowadays such a series of observations would be printed
and distributed in many libraries, and so made practically
indestructible.
Sad as the disaster was to the posthumous
fame of the great observer, a considerable compensation
was preparing. The very year that the fire occurred
in Denmark a quiet philosopher in England was speculating
and brooding on a remarkable observation that he had
made concerning the apparent motion of certain stars,
and he was led thereby to a discovery of the first
magnitude concerning the speed of light a
discovery which resuscitated the old theory of Roemer
about Jupiter’s satellites, and made both it
and him immortal.
James Bradley lived a quiet, uneventful,
studious life, mainly at Oxford but afterwards at
the National Observatory at Greenwich, of which he
was third Astronomer-Royal, Flamsteed and Halley having
preceded him in that office. He had taken orders,
and lectured at Oxford as Savilian Professor.
It is said that he pondered his great discovery while
pacing the Long Walk at Magdalen College and
a beautiful place it is to meditate in.
Bradley was engaged in making observations
to determine if possible the parallax of some of the
fixed stars. Parallax means the apparent relative
shift of bodies due to a change in the observer’s
position. It is parallax which we observe
when travelling by rail and looking out of window
at the distant landscape. Things at different
distances are left behind at different apparent rates,
and accordingly they seem to move relatively to each
other. The most distant objects are least affected;
and anything enormously distant, like the moon, is
not subject to this effect, but would retain its position
however far we travelled, unless we had some extraordinarily
precise means of observation.
So with the fixed stars: they
were being observed from a moving carriage viz.
the earth and one moving at the rate of
nineteen miles a second. Unless they were infinitely
distant, or unless they were all at the same distance,
they must show relative apparent motions among themselves.
Seen from one point of the earth’s orbit, and
then in six months from an opposite point, nearly
184 million miles away, surely they must show some
difference of aspect.
Remember that the old Copernican difficulty
had never been removed. If the earth revolved
round the sun, how came it that the fixed stars showed
no parallax? The fact still remained a surprise,
and the question a challenge. Picard, like other
astronomers, supposed that it was only because the
methods of observation had not been delicate enough;
but now that, since the invention of the telescope
and the founding of National Observatories, accuracy
hitherto undreamt of was possible, why not attack
the problem anew? This, then, he did, watching
the stars with great care to see if in six months
they showed any change in absolute position with reference
to the pole of the heavens; any known secular motion
of the pole, such as precession, being allowed for.
Already he thought he detected a slight parallax for
several stars near the pole, and the subject was exciting
much interest.
Bradley determined to attempt the
same investigation. He was not destined to succeed
in it. Not till the present century was success
in that most difficult observation achieved; and even
now it cannot be done by the absolute methods then
attempted; but, as so often happens, Bradley, in attempting
one thing, hit upon another, and, as it happened,
one of still greater brilliance and importance.
Let us trace the stages of his discovery.
Atmospheric refraction made horizon
observations useless for the delicacy of his purpose,
so he chose stars near the zenith, particularly one [gamma]
Draconis. This he observed very carefully
at different seasons of the year by means of an instrument
specially adapted for zenith observations, viz.
a zenith sector. The observations were made in
conjunction with a friend of his, an amateur astronomer
named Molyneux, and they were made at Kew. Molyneux
was shortly made First Lord of the Admiralty, or something
important of that sort, and gave up frivolous pursuits.
So Bradley observed alone. They observed the star
accurately early in the month of December, and then
intended to wait six months. But from curiosity
Bradley observed it again only about a week later.
To his surprise, he found that it had already changed
its position. He recorded his observation on
the back of an old envelope: it was his wont
thus to use up odd scraps of paper he was
not, I regret to say, a tidy or methodical person and
this odd piece of paper turned up long afterwards
among his manuscripts. It has been photographed
and preserved as an historical relic.
Again and again he repeated the observation
of the star, and continually found it moving still
a little further and further south, an excessively
small motion, but still an appreciable one not
to be set down to errors of observation. So it
went on till March. It then waited, and after
a bit longer began to return, until June. By
September it was displaced as much to the north as
it had been to the south, and by December it had got
back to its original position. It had described,
in fact, a small oscillation in the course of the
year. The motion affected neighbouring stars
in a similar way, and was called an “aberration,”
or wandering from their true place.
For a long time Bradley pondered over
this observation, and over others like them which
he also made. He found one group of stars describing
small circles, while others at a distance from them
were oscillating in straight lines, and all the others
were describing ellipses. Unless this state of
things were cleared up, accurate astronomy was impossible.
The fixed stars! they were not fixed a
bit. To refined and accurate observation, such
as was now possible, they were all careering about
in little orbits having a reference to the earth’s
year, besides any proper motion which they might really
have of their own, though no such motion was at present
known. Not till Herschel was that discovered;
not till this extraordinary aberration was allowed
for could it be discovered. The effect observed
by Bradley and Molyneux must manifestly be only an
apparent motion: it was absurd to suppose a real
stellar motion regulating itself according to the
position of the earth. Parallax could not do
it, for that would displace stars relatively among
each other it would not move similarly
a set of neighbouring stars.
At length, four years after the observation,
the explanation struck him, while in a boat upon the
Thames. He noticed the apparent direction of
the wind changed whenever the boat started. The
wind veered when the boat’s motion changed.
Of course the cause of this was obvious enough the
speed of the wind and the speed of the boat were compounded,
and gave an apparent direction of the wind other than
the true direction. But this immediately suggested
a cause for what he had observed in the heavens.
He had been observing an apparent direction of the
stars other than the true direction, because he was
observing from a moving vehicle. The real direction
was doubtless fixed: the apparent direction veered
about with the motion of the earth. It must be
that light did not travel instantaneously, but gradually,
as Roemer had surmised fifty years ago; and that the
motion of the light was compounded with the motion
of the earth.
Think of a stream of light or anything
else falling on a moving carriage. The carriage
will run athwart the stream, the occupants of the
carriage will mistake its true direction. A rifle
fired through the windows of a railway carriage by
a man at rest outside would make its perforations
not in the true line of fire unless the train is stationary.
If the train is moving, the line joining the holes
will point to a place in advance of where the rifle
is really located.
So it is with the two glasses of a
telescope, the object-glass and eye-piece, which are
pierced by the light; an astronomer, applying his
eye to the tube and looking for the origin of the disturbance,
sees it apparently, but not in its real position its
apparent direction is displaced in the direction of
the telescope’s motion; by an amount depending
on the ratio of the velocity of the earth to the velocity
of light, and on the angle between those two directions.
But how minute is the displacement!
The greatest effect is obtained when the two motions
are at right angles to each other, i.e. when
the star seen is at right angles to the direction
of the earth’s motion, but even then it is only
20”, or 1/180th part of a degree; one-ninetieth
of the moon’s apparent diameter. It could
not be detected without a cross-wire in the telescope,
and would only appear as a slight displacement from
the centre of the field, supposing the telescope accurately
pointed to the true direction.
Stars in the direction in which the
earth was moving would not be thus affected; there
would be nothing in mere approach or recession to alter
direction or to make itself in any way visible.
Stars at right angles to the earth’s line of
motion would be most affected, and these would be
all displaced by the full amount of 20 seconds of arc.
Stars in intermediate directions would be displaced
by intermediate amounts.
But the line of the earth’s
motion is approximately a circle round the sun, hence
the direction of its advance is constantly though slowly
changing, and in one year it goes through all the points
of the compass. The stars, being displaced always
in the line of advance, must similarly appear to describe
little closed curves, always a quadrant in advance
of the earth, completing their orbits once a year.
Those near the pole of the ecliptic will describe
circles, being always at right angles to the motion.
Those in the plane of the ecliptic (near the zodiac)
will be sometimes at right angles to the motion, but
at other times will be approached or receded from;
hence these will oscillate like pendulums once a year;
and intermediate stars will have intermediate motions that
is to say, will describe ellipses of varying excentricity,
but all completed in a year, and all with the major
axis 20”. This agreed very closely with
what was observed.
The main details were thus clearly
and simply explained by the hypothesis of a finite
velocity for light, “the successive propagation
of light in time.” This time there was no
room for hesitation, and astronomers hailed the discovery
with enthusiasm.
Not yet, however, did Bradley rest.
The finite velocity of light explained the major part
of the irregularities he had observed, but not the
whole. The more carefully he measured the amount
of the deviation, the less completely accurate became
its explanation.
There clearly was a small outstanding
error or discrepancy; the stars were still subject
to an unexplained displacement not, indeed,
a displacement that repeated itself every year, but
one that went through a cycle of changes in a longer
period.
The displacement was only about half
that of aberration, and having a longer period was
rather more difficult to detect securely. But
the major difficulty was the fact that the two sorts
of disturbances were co-existent, and the skill of
disentangling them, and exhibiting the true and complete
cause of each inequality, was very brilliant.
For nineteen years did Bradley observe
this minor displacement, and in that time he saw it
go through a complete cycle. Its cause was now
clear to him; the nineteen-year period suggested the
explanation. It is the period in which the moon
goes through all her changes a period known
to the ancients as the lunar cycle, or Metonic cycle,
and used by them to predict eclipses. It is still
used for the first rough approximation to the prediction
of eclipses, and to calculate Easter. The “Golden
Number” of the Prayer-book is the number of
the year in this cycle.
The cause of the second inequality,
or apparent periodic motion of the stars, Bradley
made out to be a nodding motion of the earth’s
axis.
The axis of the earth describes its
precessional orbit or conical motion every 26,000
years, as had long been known; but superposed upon
this great movement have now been detected minute nods,
each with a period of nineteen years.
The cause of the nodding is completely
accounted for by the theory of gravitation, just as
the precession of the équinoxes was. Both
disturbances result from the attraction of the moon
on the non-spherical earth on its protuberant
equator.
“Nutation” is, in fact,
a small perturbation of precession. The motion
may be observed in a non-sleeping top. The slow
conical motion of the top’s slanting axis represents
the course of precession. Sometimes this path
is loopy, and its little nods correspond to nutation.
The probable existence of some such
perturbation had not escaped the sagacity of Newton,
and he mentions something about it in the Principia,
but thinks it too small to be detected by observation.
He was thinking, however, of a solar disturbance rather
than a lunar one, and this is certainly very small,
though it, too, has now been observed.
Newton was dead before Bradley made
these great discoveries, else he would have been greatly
pleased to hear of them.
These discoveries of aberration and
nutation, says Delambre, the great French historian
of science, secure to their author a distinguished
place after Hipparchus and Kepler among the astronomers
of all ages and all countries.